Seattle, Washington, March 25th 2008.
Composer, conductor, teacher Gerhard Samuel passed away today
of cardiac arrest at his home on Queen Anne Hill in Seattle.
Samuel was
born in Bonn, Germany, on April 20th, 1924, and moved to America with
his immediate family in 1939 to escape Nazi persecution. He can claim
a long international career as conductor, founder of festivals,
tireless promoter of new music, prolific composer, and professor of
music and conducting
He studied at Eastman School of Music, and at Yale University under
Paul Hindemith. At Tanglewood he was a protégé of Serge Koussevitsky. He worked
on Broadway, promoted American music in post-war Paris, and was an associate conductor of the Minneapolis Symphony.
In 1959 he became
Music Director of the Oakland symphony and San Francisco Ballet. He
founded the Oakland Chamber Orchestra and was first conductor of the
Cabrillo Festival.
In 1971 he became associate conductor of Los Angeles Philharmonic under
Zubin Mehta and a professor at California Institute of the Arts.
In 1976 he
was appointed to the faculty of the University of Cincinnati, College - Conservatory
of Music in Cincinnati, Ohio. As music director of the Conservatory’s Philharmonia Orchestra, he
tirelessly championed avant-garde music and brought the orchestra to
international standing, culminating in a performance at the
International Mahler Festival in Paris in 1989.
Behind Samuel’s public persona as performer and teacher, was a composer
of remarkable and enduring originality. His work is hyper-expressive
melodically, evocative, sensuous and constantly shifting in sound and
fabric. He was ceaselessly creative and at the time of his death he was
working on an opera based on Thomas Mann’s novella “The Blood of the
Walsungs”.
He retired to Seattle in 1996 and loved to spend time at his cabin in
the Cascade Mountains. He is survived by his partner Achim Nicklis,
sister Erica Wilhelm, nephews Cris and Marc Wilhelm and their families,
and by his cousins and friends.